Consider how you feel when driving a car for a long distance. When you get tired, you could reach for caffeine or an adaptogen. Both would keep you alert and help you focus. However, a cup of coffee eventually leaves you feeling depleted. Adaptogens have the unique ability to increase alertness and focus without causing energy depletion, addiction, or withdrawal symptoms. Unlike stimulants, adaptogens provide energy while also helping to protect the heart, liver, and brain.
Every living organism has the ability to adapt to stressful and harmful environments in order to survive. By taking adaptogens, you are using what other organisms created for themselves to defend, adapt, and survive during stressful situations. Ashwagandha and rhodiola are two “must-have” herbal adaptogens that can help you thrive during times of mental and physical stress. They can help you feel recharged and rejuvenated, and they are the subject of this article.
Adaptogens: The Energy You Need to Face the Day
Adaptogens help us resist stress and give us energy to adapt to rapidly changing circumstances. Because of their revitalizing effects, they are able to significantly improve our mood, regardless of what our day holds. Early researchers referred to adaptogens as having a tonic effect – an “all over” ability to provide the kinds of rejuvenating, healing support that people need most. They bring the mind and body back toward a normal, even keel state by regulating the body’s reaction to stress. Ashwagandha and rhodiola are two of the most effective adaptogens available.
Ashwagandha
Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) is a frequently utilized botanical in Ayurvedic medicine, where it is known as a rasayana – a rejuvenator. This herb provides a wealth of potent, natural compounds, which boost your resistance to fatigue, stress, and other physical and psychological factors that can make you feel depleted. Clinical and scientific studies have found that ashwagandha decreases levels of cortisol (our “fight or flight” hormone), and significantly reduces feelings of fatigue and stress – by over 50 percent in one clinical trial.
Ashwagandha Stops Stress, Fatigue, Insomnia, and Depression
In a 60-day, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, volunteers received ashwagandha (KSM-66, a specialized extract) or a placebo. Each individual completed surveys relating to stress, depression, and fatigue. Cortisol levels were also noted, as were the physical symptoms of stress, like muscle tension and increased heart rate.
Throughout the test, researchers measured the differences between the ashwagandha group and the placebo group. By day 60, they were dramatic — the ashwagandha group showed that physical symptoms decreased by 76 percent, stress and insomnia decreased by 69 percent, social dysfunction decreased by 68 percent, and severe depression decreased by 79 percent.
The control group, by contrast, was nowhere close. Their numbers were 4.9 percent, 11.6 percent, -3.9 percent, and -10.6 percent respectively.
This study is an excellent example of the range of ashwagandha’s benefits, because it shows how the herb is able to promote mental and physical health.
Rhodiola
The second adaptogen I highly recommend is rhodiola (Rhodiola rosea), which is native to northern Europe and Asia. Serious research of this impressive herb began in the early 1960s in the former Soviet Union. Early studies found that rhodiola increased norepinephrine, dopamine, and serotonin neurotransmitter activity in the brain. This activity allows sections of the brain that emphasize analysis, planning, memory, and attention to work more effectively and calmly. When the brain is functioning optimally, you feel more relaxed and energized.
Clinical research on rhodiola has also focused on stress-induced fatigue and mild to moderate depression. Six randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials in healthy subjects suggest beneficial effects of rhodiola on physical and mental performance related to fatigue.
Additionally, the results of two clinical studies conducted in patients with mild to moderate depression suggest possible antidepressant action for rhodiola in adults. In comparison to most conventional antidepressants, rhodiola is well-tolerated, very safe, and has no adverse interactions with medications.
Rhodiola Improves Focus, Feelings of Well-Being, and Endurance
Rhodiola includes salidrosides and the compounds rosavin, rosin, and rosarian, which are responsible for the cognitive, stress-reducing, and energizing effects of the herb. A clinical study on rhodiola focused on fatigue associated with night duty for young physicians. The findings were promising and showed an improvement in the rhodiola group for total mental performance – important for anyone working over the evening hours, but especially critical, in this case, to the doctors and their patients.
Other clinical research focused on participants’ ability to multitask and still accomplish goals. In one double-blind study of 60 college students, the rhodiola group saw improvements in mental fatigue, overall fitness and well-being, and final exam grades – a real world test with positive results if ever there was one.
Rhodiola is also recommended for physical factors, including endurance, reaction time, speed, strength, and attention. Studies of Olympic athletes showed marked improvements versus the placebo groups, especially for heart rate (104-106 percent of baseline, versus 129 percent in the placebo group) recovery time.
An Amazing Combination to Beat the Effects of Stress and Feel Energized
When taken separately, ashwagandha and rhodiola can drastically improve your daily energy levels and resistance to stress. When taken together, these two adaptogens work synergistically to help you face the most challenging circumstances. The unique abilities of clinically validated ashwagandha and rhodiola allow them to calm you in stressful situations and energize you when you need it most. Alone, they are powerful, but together, they are unbeatable.